“I do not think he is,” she murmured, looking straight before her.
“But—it is true the only communication I have had since has been from London—still I thought—I mean I was under the impression that Lord Dynmore had at once gone to your father.”
“I think he saw him at the office,” Kate answered, “but I believe my father is not acting for him.”
“Do you know why?” said the rector bluntly. “Why he is not, I mean?”
“No,” she said—that and nothing more. She was too proud to defend her father, though he had let drop enough in the family circle to enable her to come to a conclusion, and she might with truth have made out a story which would have set the lawyer in a light differing much from that in which the rector was accustomed to view him.
Reginald Lindo walked on considering the matter. Suddenly he said, “The archdeacon thinks I ought to resign. What do you think, Miss Bonamy?”
Her heart began to beat quickly. He was seeking her advice!—asking her opinion in this matter so utterly important to him, so absolutely vital! For a moment she could not speak, she was so filled with surprise. Then she said gently, her eyes on the pavement, “I do not think I can judge.”
“But you must have heard—more I dare say than I have!” he rejoined with a forced laugh. “Will you tell me what you think?”
She looked before her, her face troubled. Then she spoke bravely.
“I think you should judge for yourself,” she said in a low tone, full of serious feeling. “The responsibility is yours. I do not think that you should depend entirely on any one’s advice, but should try to do right according to your conscience—not acting hastily, but coolly, and on reflection.”